Sunday, September 6, 2020

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The Scene: A Stress Headache That Most Pirates Can Do Without
Andy Maxwell, 06 Sep 09:19 PM

RipOver the past two weeks 'The Scene', the individuals, groups, and entities that are often described as sitting at the top of the so-called 'Piracy Pyramid', has been thrust into the mainstream media.

A US Government-led operation, carried out on several continents against the 'Sparks Conspiracy', listed three individuals from the UK, US and Norway as the main targets of a massive investigation. What took place on the ground, however, ended up being something much, much bigger.

While SPARKS and related groups GECKOS, DRONES, ROVERS and SPLINTERS were placed front and center, operations like this don't and can't operate in a vacuum. These groups were part of an organic network built up over years and, as such, their activities and members touched huge numbers of disparate yet interconnected individuals involved in the piracy world overall, not just 'The Scene' itself.

One of the interesting things about The Scene is that over almost two decades, it has gained almost mythical status as an almost impossible-to-penetrate 'place' where only the most elite of pirates hang out. As a result, many people aspire to become a 'member' one day, hoping to bathe in the collective mystery, kudos and notoriety.

What the unfolding events of the past two weeks have shown, however, is that The Scene is already much closer to regular pirates than most people might think, touching and even intermingling at some level with private and public torrent sites, streaming platforms, and similar services.

For two weeks insiders have been happy to talk, presenting facts, ideas, theories and suggestions on what happened behind the headlines and who might have been involved or even responsible. Unfortunately, it's not always information that makes for comfortable reading.

More than once since the massive raids, names of particular Scene members and groups sucked into the investigation have been repeatedly mentioned by various sources. Who these people are in 'real-life' is a mystery but, over the years, pictures of what they might be like, largely based on their activities, are subconsciously formed by observers.

Then, due to the ensuing chaos, it suddenly becomes apparent that not only is Group A the same as Group B and Group C, but also Person X, who people thought they knew under a very specific identity, is also Person Y and Person Z, all of whom have different and sometimes even conflicting online traits and personas.

One of the problems (and there are many) is that Groups A to C and Persons X to Z all have their 'own' connections, trusted and valued by some but untrusted and even despised by others. In reality, it now transpires, they could all be inextricably linked via shared contacts, with many of those involved oblivious to what they've become part of.

Add into the mix that Persons D and E, who may or may not have been previously arrested according to rumor, are very connected with many of the contacts of the individuals and groups listed above and way beyond. At this point, it's very easy to visualize an extremely large network of people that might be just one step away from being arrested themselves having been completely compromised.

If that's not enough stress, someone then blurts out that a person who may have been previously and for years viewed as the mild-mannered janitor from the 70s cartoon Hong Kong Phooey, is now rumored to be the martial arts hound himself, undermining all previous perceptions and throwing all of the mental connections formed around them into chaos.

Of course, many experienced members will be shouting that they knew all of this already but from the communications received from those further down the chain, echoes of "No, I didn't know that," and "Really? Shit…" shows that many people simply aren't in the loop. And if everyone had been completely in the loop, lots of people wouldn't have arrested recently.

The admittedly-labored point is this: if people really must obtain all the latest movies and TV shows for free, doing it quietly via torrent sites etc seems much, much less stressful than getting tightly involved in The Scene or anyone close to it. Indeed, The Scene seems more of a complex lifestyle choice than a hobby for many participants, but one that could implode at any second.

Action, adventure, and mystery probably sound like an exciting prospect to some but after reading dozens of emails and tip-offs plus pages of Scene chats containing accusations and potential bombshells (not to mention concern and speculation about who is who and what they might have said to whom), the term "mental exhaustion" springs to mind.

You can laugh while fetching my cocoa and pipe if you like but at this time of life, when relaxing and quiet time is at a premium, too much involvement in The Scene sounds like an utterly exhausting not to mention precarious way to spend one's time.

There again, some people like freefall skydiving and exploring pitch-black caves filled with muddy brown water. So, Godspeed to the intrepid and brave, just mind who packed your parachute and topped-up your oxygen bottle. Tonight, I'm watching Netflix instead. I'm fairly sure it won't end too badly.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Takedown Requests Target News Reports that Cover Leaked Tenet Movie
Ernesto Van der Sar, 06 Sep 12:16 PM

tenetWhen a major blockbuster title leaks online, it sets a series of intruiging processes in motion.

It was no different this week when low-quality CAM versions of Christopher Nolan's sci-fi thriller 'Tenet' surfaced.

Immediately after this happened thousands of seasoned pirates flocked to their favorite download portals, grabbing a copy. At the same time, anti-piracy outfits sprang into action to issue a continuous stream of takedown requests.

The leak was also a heads up to scammers and other dubious actors. While fake Tenet copies were already circulating, a real leak tends to increase the demand. And indeed, over the past days, we've seen scammy links being posted on many legitimate sites including Medium.com, Opensource.com, Shopify.com and Schooltube.com.

There were also news outlets who jumped on the story, including the undersigned. In the days after the leak came out, hundreds of sites referenced it. While some reports are better than others, the news articles are certainly not infringing anyone's copyrights.

Nonetheless, we noticed this week that several takedown requests targeted real leaked copies, scammy links, and also news reports. One notice sent by the Estonian branch of ACME Film stands out as it combines all three.

The screenshot below starts with a link to a Pirate Bay proxy, followed by a list of scammy postings on legitimate sites such as Sourceforge and Openlibrary. At the very bottom, there are two links to 'news' reports. In total, there are five URLs of news reports in that takedown notice alone.

leak tenet

That notice doesn't come alone, there's another one that flags a news report as infringing as well. We are pretty sure that these were all reported 'accidentally' but still, a quick glance by an actual person could have easily prevented it.

We fully understand that writing this article is not without risk at all. After all, writing about news reports that were targeted because they covered the Tenet leak, may trigger takedown requests as well. However, we're willing to take a chance.

Also, Google is known to be quite good at spotting these errors. When we checked, most takedown requests for the news articles were being ignored, which means that they are still in the search results.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

 
 
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